Then I needed to fabricate engine mounts for the front of the V2203 that attached to the hyd. pump.
I started off with some plate I match drilled to bolt to the lower sides of the block, and was going to "somehow" get that steel to the holes where the mounts for the Perkins were.
After considerable CAD drawings (those are sketches on blank pages) I, with of the help of North Idaho Wolfman, came to the idea of a horseshoe plate with holes matched to the V2203 bellhousing. I put a piece of cardboard up to the bellhousing the best I could, because the bolts holding the support rods were in the way, and marked the outline of the bell housing. I decided 3/8" material is what I would use. That became a project in itself, but I stopped by the machine shop and asked Dave if he had any 3/8" plate that would match my cardboard pattern.
He had an odd shaped piece and I was glad to settle for that. He offered to use his plasma table to cut it out. That was interesting because he had to insert pieces of scrap material so the cutting head would make the radius. If there was no metal there the machine would stop! He also cut the inside radius.
I then matched the holes in the bellhousing to the flange, and bolted it up. However I did have to make a spacer to be sure the flywheel would clear the mounting plate. I took some 5/8" copper line, smashed it in the vise, cut notches out so I could bend a radius, and drilled holes to match the plate! Worked fine.
Then had to fabricate some steel to get over to the existing mounting hold. That's the last couple of pictures.
Oh another bit of information that was puzzling. I got a metric tap to clean out the threaded holes in the bellhousing because it's a Kubota, right? That was when I used a couple of metric bolts with the washer welded to them for the engine support.....
Those holes are NOT metric, they're SAE. Apparently Carrier special ordered those! But the tap I used cleaned out the muck and didn't cut any new threads. I think it was 10mm, and the bolts are 3/8". Another bit of confusion helped by North Idaho Wolfman.